The Coffins of Little Hope Quotes
The Coffins of Little Hope
by
Timothy Schaffert1,434 ratings, 3.09 average rating, 338 reviews
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The Coffins of Little Hope Quotes
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“We could endlessly reminisce, live in the past to an unhealthy degree, then politely kill each other some winter night before bedtime, stirring poison into our cups of whiskey-spiked chamomile tea, wearing party hats. Then, nervous about our double homicide, we could lie in bed together, holding hands again, frightened and waiting, still wondering, after all these years, if we even believed in our own souls.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“You were young, I thought, not once but always before, always always, every day before the day just passed. You were young only minutes ago.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“I thought it such a shame that our culture had not devised a way to defang old age. A sophisticated civilization wouldn't ridicule senility, it would elevate it, worship it, wouldn't it? We would train ourselves to see poetry in the nonsense of dementia, to actually look forward to becoming so untethered from the world. We'd make a ceremony of casting off our material goods and confining ourselves to a single room, leaving all our old, abandoned space to someone new, someone young, so that we could die alone, indifferent to our own decay and lost beauty." (127”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“Tiff needed the words on the page to become the voice in her head, her own voice, or an approximation of it, and she needed the paper and the sound of the scratch of her chapped fingertips against it as she fiddled with each page.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“Kindness to your family costs you almost nothing but affords a wealth of goodwill.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“A Lutheran church in Nebraska is typically a place where any mad passion for Christ is politely concealed. Men and women recite the various creeds in hypnotic monotone; the hymns, pumped from wheezy organ pipes, are sung with no lilt or musicality. The members of the choirs not only don't dance, they don't sway. That's not to say no one is ever smacked hard with God's love or filled up to the eyeballs with the Holy Spirit, but when you are, you keep it to yourself." (48)”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“He took from his coat pocket a handful of wadded-up cash, as if children had paid him directly with their sweaty clutches of dollar bills.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“But they simply didn't know Sammy in the late hours, all his virulent bedtime prayers whispered away into his folded hands, releasing his worry and anxiety over the sinful so he could sleep well and fight the devil again in the daylight. And, easefully and kindly, he'd hold Abby in his arms, becoming just as lost as everyone else, just as blind in the dark.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“Ivy had not been a junkie or a drunk-she’d been too uncommitted to anything to be an addict of any kind.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“...people feel they can be revealing around me, that they can unbutton their lips and let slip intimate facts ad trust that I have the maturity to keep my mouth shut.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
“Even when not in the act of writing Muscatine a letter, I was often composing one in my mind, situating the words just so, plunking one here, then one there, gauging how to sound worthy of his regard.”
― The Coffins of Little Hope
― The Coffins of Little Hope
